View the spoiler for my guess at what I think it might be, but please first come to your own conclusion before looking at mine — I don’t want to bias your guess.

My guess

Psilocybe cyanescens


They were found in mid-november in the Salish Coast region of Cascadia. They were growing out of woodchips composed of a mixture of western hemlock (majority), and western red cedar.

Side view of one full mature specimen:

A group with a sample of the substrate (the cap appears to be umbonate):

A closeup side view, and internal view of the stem (it appears to be hollow):

Cross section of the gills — they appear to be adnate, or sub-decurrent:

Underside of view of the gills:

Spore print (first on white background (the split is due to two halves), second on a black background):

Examples specimens once dried:

Examples of the colony, and the location/substrate in which it was growing:


Cross-posts:

  • Romkslrqusz@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Not a mycologist, but those do look like Psilocybe Cyaanescens / Wavy Caps to me.

    One of the defining traits of Pailocybin mushrooms is that they bruise blue where touched / handled / damaged, but that doesn’t seem evident in these pictures.

    • dandelion
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      24 hours ago

      the spore print is also brown here, but should be purple-ish black if it were Psilocybe spp., also the stipe looks wrong for that ID - I would say definitely not Psilocybe cyanescens (not just because they’re not bruising blue / purple / black).

      • Martin Jambon 🌍🌎🌏@mastodon.social
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        16 hours ago

        @dandelion @Romkslrqusz I concur. Definitely not Psilocybe cyanescens based on various features of the cap and stipe. Generally, in P. cyanescens, there would be a striking contrast between the white stipe and the caramel-colored cap on young specimens with a rubbery cap surface. (I have difficulties with distinguishing spore color on spore prints but kudos on the photos)

      • Kalcifer@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        16 hours ago

        I would say definitely not Psilocybe cyanescens

        Would you by chance have a guess as to what they might actually be?

        • dandelion
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          3 hours ago

          it’s what we call in the field call “LBMs”, little brown mushrooms 😆 It’s not worth trying to ID to species, and often isn’t easy to do. There are certain mushrooms I don’t try that for, LBMs and Russulas are often the kinds of mushrooms I don’t bother with.

          My suggestion is to find a local mycology group where you can join them on forays and learn how to ID mushrooms.